Tag Archives: energy

Duke – All Set To Deliver Growth Going Forward

Summary Company’s increased focus on regulated operations will drive future growth. Duke faces challenges in international segments, which could weigh on earnings in the near term. Growth will stay strong in long term, backed by company’s domestic regulated operations. Stock’s current valuation stays compelling as it is trading at a cheap forward P/E of 13.9x. Duke stays an impressive investment prospect for income-hunting investors, as it offers a solid dividend yield of 4.8%. Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK ) stays a core utility stock for income-hunting investors, as it offers a solid yield of 4.8% , above the industry average of 4%, and has a solid fundamental outlook. I think Duke is a high quality, large utility cap utility with a healthy and visible path towards the average EPS growth rate of 5% through 2019; the company’s low-risk domestic regulated business investments will drive its future growth. Moreover, the company’s strong rate base growth through 2019, along with its plan to hold operational and maintenance ((O&M)) expenses flat through 2016 will augur well for its earnings and dividend growth in the coming years. Also, the stock’s current valuation stays cheap; I think the stock should trade in line with its industry’s average P/E of 15.9x. Despite the fact that the company is facing challenges at its international segment, Duke Energy International, which may affect its performance in upcoming quarters, I think Duke is one of the best large cap defensive utility stocks. Growth Catalysts Duke has a solid fundamental outlook, and the company has been working to strengthen its future earnings growth. I think the company has taken the right strategic decisions in recent quarters, including repatriating cash from the international segment and the sale of Midwest assets, which will have a favorable impact on its performance going forward. Also, the company’s increasing focus on the core domestic regulated operations, which contributed almost 90% towards its total earnings, will improve its business risk profile. The company expects to enjoy EPS growth rate in a range of 4%-6% in future, which will be supported by its $42 billion capital investment plan through 2019. Going forward, attractive regulated investments including natural gas pipeline, NCEMPA asset acquisition and accelerated infrastructure investment, will drive its future growth. The company recently completed the $1.25 billion NCEMPA asset purchase, earlier than expected, which will have a positive impact of $0.04 per share on the 2015 EPS. Separately, if Duke moves ahead with its plan to file a new grid modernization plan in Indiana by the end of 2015, it will bode well for its stock price. Furthermore, the company is correctly taking initiatives to expand its renewable energy fleet, which will allow it to comply with the increasing environmental regulations to reduce carbon emissions and maintain reliable cost effective power generation assets. The company has been working on different solar and wind energy projects; Duke plans to add 500MW of solar capacity over the next ten years. Given the company’s consistent emission reduction efforts, the company has successfully lowered CO2 by 22% since 2005 through the transition to natural gas fleet, retirement of older coal units and investment in renewable energy sources. The company is moving ahead nicely to meet emission reduction by 32% by 2030. To further strengthen and support future growth, I think the company should focus more on renewable energy projects and make new investments towards natural gas reserves, which will offer rate base growth. Despite the strong performance of the company’s domestic regulated segment, its international segment continues to face challenges, which remains a concern for investors. Brazil’s economic and hydro challenges, lower oil prices and foreign exchange headwinds continue to weigh on the company’s consolidated EPS. The company needs to announce some additional opportunities around infrastructure development and acquisitions to offset the weakness of its international business operations. Also, the Brazilian government’s recent announcement to help companies like Duke, who have to dispatch thermal plants before hydro plants, could help the company’s international segment’s operations. However, I think that if the performance of the international segment does not improve in the upcoming quarters, the company needs to consider the option of selling its international operations, which will allow it to focus more on high quality domestic regulated operations, which will also augur well for its stock price. Summation Duke is positioned well to deliver healthy growth in future years. The company’s increased focus on regulated operations, along with robust capital investment profile through 2019, will drive its future growth. The company faces challenges in its international segments, which could weigh on its earnings in the near term, but in the long term, growth will stay strong, backed by its domestic regulated operations. The stock’s current valuation stays compelling as it is trading at a cheap forward P/E of 13.9x , versus the utility industry forward P/E of 15.9x ; in my opinion, Duke should at least be in line with its industry average, given its constructive regulatory environment, above average earnings growth and accelerating dividend growth. Duke stays an impressive investment prospect for income-hunting investors, as it offers a solid dividend yield of 4.8% at compelling valuation. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Ignore Buffett: Refiners Are A Low-Quality Industry About To Plunge

Refining companies have been all the rage in 2015. After a brief lull, Buffett reignited passion for the sector buying a stake in Phillips 66. Ignore the hype, refiners are at the top of a cyclical boom. Aggressive investors should consider shorting the sector during this period of high volatility. So refiners are back in the news. They’ve been the toast of the town for much of 2015 as strong margins have driven rocketing share prices. Refining margins started plunging recently, and the stock market dumped; the one-two punch knocked the refining space down pretty hard. Predictably, lots of folks are running around calling it a big buy the dip opportunity. These calls are getting louder now that Warren Buffett has announced owning a large stake in Phillips 66 (NYSE: PSX ). He bought a stake worth roughly $4.5 billion, not chump change, even to a company as large as Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A ) (NYSE: BRK.B ). Buffett’s track record with energy is mixed. PetroChina (NYSE: PTR ) was a huge win for him, Chevron (NYSE: CVX ) and his dive into Energy Futures bonds were large mistakes that caused big losses for his company. His recent buy on Exxon (NYSE: XOM ) was extremely poorly timed, but he had the good sense to sell before it turned into another large loss. While I think buying refiners now is a terrible idea, I’ll give Buffett and his Phillips 66 a pass. Phillips is rapidly moving into other segments that are less vulnerable to the feast and famine dynamics of the refining industry. This is good because the refining industry stands like a shaky rig staring down a class four hurricane just miles away. Refiners have had a big boom since 2010, largely driven by expanding margins. Alas, these refining booms never last, this industry is a cyclical money pit that ends up having the same sort of returns that only fare well compared to, say, airlines or asteroid mining schemes. Just to be clear, this industry is about as far as you can get from anything suitable for buy and hold investors. It’s very much a trader’s paradise, buy when these companies are on the brink of bankruptcy, sell when people get euphoric again. Take the long-term 35-year chart for Tesoro (NYSE: TSO ), one of the more competent and (occasionally) beloved pure-play refiners. (click to enlarge) In 1980, yes, back when disco was still a respectable trend, Tesoro shares traded as high as $16. They then did nothing for the next 12 years, falling as low as $1.37 in 1992. Refining entered one of its periodic booms, sending shares up 8x to $10 in 1998 – still well short of where it was back in 1980. Then disaster hit on the next cyclical collapse, sending shares as low as 62 cents in 2002. That’s a miserable return on investment since 1980, a 96% capital loss over 22 years! And to be clear refining is a capital intensive industry, these guys only pay acceptable dividends (for short periods of time) during sector peaks, followed by long periods of abolishing the dividend all together while they’re in “avoid bankruptcy” mode. You’re not getting paid to wait owning these guys while their stocks go sideways decades at a time. After 2002, fortunes turned brighter with a big increase in gasoline demand as the SUV craze hit. As gasoline usage surged, refiners suddenly (finally) found themselves with excess demand for their industry, and margins soared. Tesoro shares would go on a monster run, clocking out a 100x return for anyone that bought near the low. Shares peaked in the 60s in 2007 and then started to dive. In 2008, as the economy started to sink and rising oil prices killed consumer demand for gasoline and other refined products, the refineries started another classic bust. Shares, which started the year at $45 in 2008 fell as low as $6 by that winter, a stunning 85% one-year collapse – a dive so steep, it put most of the banks to shame. Remember, if you paid $16 a share in 1980, at this point, you’re still sitting on a 60% loss, 28 years later – and Tesoro is a refining industry leader. Just think of how the lower-quality refiners did over that three decade span! In 2010, refiners started to recover, aided at first by some timely hurricane activity and then by the rise of US oil production. The glut of US oil produced by the domestic energy boom caused a massive oversupply of oil locally compared to the world market. This resulted in boom times for the US refineries, which suddenly got to enjoy cheap input fuels while the value of their refined products including gasoline, heating oil, and jet fuel remained robust. The recovering economy also helped on this count. Alas, the refining boom of 2010-2015 has died. They’re engraving its tombstone as we speak: “He had a great run, but in the end the oil bust and Chinese commodity collapse was too much for his aging heart to bear.” The refining boom was fueled up primarily by three factors. The glut of US oil, the improving US economy, and the lack of new refineries. All three of those factors are played out. As you know, oil prices have collapsed this past year. This is placing intense strain on US-based marginal oil producers. There’s a ton of data that disputes exactly where the break-even for a US shale project is, but it’s clearly north of $45 where we are today. There’s talk that US production isn’t falling yet, contrary to expectations, since capital-constrained players have to keep producing. Yeah, I acknowledge we may not see US domestic production fall straight off a cliff, but let’s be straight here, there’s no reason to expect US oil production to remain at these elevated levels. Capitalism stops unprofitable activity from continuing sooner than later. Lower prices will cause lower levels of production sooner or later, basic economics assures us of that. And US suppliers, as some of the higher marginal cost producers, will be among the first to shut up shop. When they do, the disparity of prices in between WTI and Brent crude, and particularly in discounted Midwestern crude that companies like Western Refining (NYSE: WNR ) have used to great advantage will fade. The refining boom was largely built on getting access to below normal market priced crude and letting all that extra margin soak through to the bottom line rather than going to consumers. That’s why you’ll not be seeing gas nearly as cheap as you expected at the pump with oil plunging. Another cause of higher margins has been that the US refining industry was capacity restrained. No new refineries had been built in 30 years, and many of the country’s refineries were shut in the 1980s when there was excessive capacity. The sudden appearance of the shale boom suddenly caused the nation’s refining stock to be insufficient to process all the country’s oil output. However, for the first time in ages, new refineries are being built in the US, which will add supply to the industry, putting pressure on margins. Additionally, there were an unusual number of strikes and explosions in refineries in early 2015 that put transitory upward pressure on margins. This boost is now dissipating. And finally, the economy had been improving in the US and neighboring regions that also consume US-refined petroleum products, namely Mexico and Canada. Canada now appears to be heading into a serious recession, and Mexico, while still growing economically, is sputtering. And the US economy is definitely decelerating, with the Fed threatening to tighten monetary policy as the domestic economy struggles and emerging markets are crashing. Sure enough, the crack spread has absolutely collapsed, falling from near 30 just a couple of weeks ago to the 15s today. It plunged during the market dive, and has continued diving this week, down 15% Monday, and another 5% Tuesday. To be clear, the crack spread is what butters the bread for refineries. The crack spread is the difference between their input crude and the output products such as gasoline, and fuel oil. Sure refiners can hedge, some have more exposure to other products like asphalt or specialty products, and whatnot. But that spread in general drives the industry. Notice how quickly refining stocks surged this spring when the spread shot upward. Now with it plunging again, refining stocks are likely to resemble falling anvils in coming weeks. Given the end of the conditions that caused the refining boom in the first place, there’s no reason for these stocks to have bids anywhere near these levels. Tesoro, for example, is trading at 9x cycle peak earnings levels. Analysts estimate earnings will drop by $4/share in 2016 to less than $8/share. That alone is eye-catching, you never want to see a company shed $4 in earnings power in a single year. Consider this : in 2009, Tesoro lost 87 cents a share, it lost a penny in 2010, made $4.02 in 2011, $6.20 in 2012, and then earnings plunged by more than 50% to $2.85 of EPS in 2013. Do you think that company’s current $10+ EPS earnings power is a permanent improvement, or a passing fad caused by a now-expired domestic oil boom? If EPS goes back to $2.85, like they earned in 2013, let alone making losses as they did in 2009-10, what would the stock be worth? The current $90 share price is a more than 30x multiple on earnings from just two years ago. Unless you think the domestic refining industry has entered a period of permanent bliss, despite all signs pointing to the contrary, paying 9x the unusually high current earnings is simply myopic. That refining stocks haven’t collapsed faster is a bit surprising. Perhaps they’re benefiting from the best house standing in a bad neighborhood effect. Previously, the “smart money” was flowing to the pipeline players such as Kinder Morgan (NYSE: KMI ) causing them to become substantially overvalued. I pointed this out this spring, Kinder shares are down sharply since then. Now that investors are scared out of pipelines, refiners are pretty much the last energy house that hasn’t collapsed. But their industry fundamentals have turned sharply negative, and profit margins have imploded in the past month. To sum up, here are long-term charts of two more pure-play refiners, Western and Valero (NYSE: VLO ). Western, a favorite of mine at $6 in 2008, but absurdly overvalued nowadays: (click to enlarge) And here’s Valero, the industry bellwether: (click to enlarge) Note how terrible these investments are over time – it truly is a miserable industry, like airlines for long-term holders. See where we were in 2007 when the SUV-driven refining craze ended? Yeah, that’s about where the refining industry is now. Take note of what happened next. Do your own diligence before following Buffett blindly into the refining sector. Disclosure: I am/we are short TSO, WNR. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Summer Madness To Nut Case? A Fall Preview Of ETFs

Summer 2015 saw investors sweating it out on the markets as the U.S. stock market ran into a correction territory thanks to the China gloom, Fed uncertainty, emerging market weakness and slumping commodities. Perhaps they should have stuck to the popular trading adage “Sell in May and Go Away”. After all, the May end to early September period has historically been known for melting profits at the bourses. This time around, the markets went berserk with performances swinging from sky-high in certain sectors to dreadful by others. Will the markets continue to shake in fall as well? Let’s check out: Housing Booms The housing market fired on all cylinders in summer thanks to soaring demand for new and rented homes, rising wages, accelerating job growth, affordable mortgage rates, and of course increasing consumer confidence. Among the most notable data, new home construction jumped to an almost eight-year high in July and existing home sales rose to an eight-year high. Further, homebuilder confidence in August surged to a level not seen in decades. The robust numbers spread optimism across the sector with the iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF (NYSEARCA: ITB ) and the SPDR Homebuilders ETF (NYSEARCA: XHB ) touching new highs on August 18 and 19, respectively. Both the ETFs have a decent Zacks ETF Rank of 3 or ‘Hold’ rating with a High risk outlook and were up 3.6% and 0.1%, respectively, over the past three months. The outperformance is likely to continue in the coming months given that the residential and commercial building industry has a solid Zacks Rank in the top 29%. China Glooms China has been roiling the global stock markets since the start of the summer with worries intensifying last month when the country surprisingly devalued its currency renminbi by 2% to ramp up exports. After that, sluggish factory activity data heightened fears of China’s hard landing and the resultant global damage. This led to terrible trading in China ETFs, which were the hot spot at the start the year. Even the latest round of monetary easing by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) to fight the malaise did not help the stocks to recover the losses. Given the steep decline in the stocks, China ETFs had a bloodbath with the Market Vectors ChinaAMC SME-ChiNext ETF (NYSEARCA: CNXT ) and the Deutsche X-trackers Harvest CSI 500 China-A Shares Small Cap ETF (NYSEARCA: ASHS ) stealing the show. Each of the funds was down over 20% in August and nearly 53% over the past three months. CNXT has a Zacks ETF Rank of 2 or ‘Buy’ rating with a High risk outlook while ASHS has a Zacks ET Rank of 3. Rough trading in China is likely to continue at least in the near term given that the world’s second-largest economy is faltering with slower growth, credit crunch, a property market slump, weak domestic demand, lower industrial production and lower factory output. Corporate profits are also lower than a year ago. Additionally, a slew of recent measures are not helping in any way to revive investors’ confidence. Further, most analysts believe that China will continue to face a long period of uncertainty that would result in more volatility Crazy Run of ‘The Oil’ After a stable start to summer, oil saw a frenzied August, showing large swings in its prices. In fact, the commodity exhibited the maximum volatility in 24 years . This is because oil price enjoyed its biggest rally of more than 25% in the last three days of August but softened again as worries about growth in the Asian powerhouse resurfaced. U.S. crude was trading around $60 per barrel for most of the first half of summer but gradually dropped to nearly $38 per barrel on August 25 – a level not seen since 2009. Oil suddenly sprung up to over $49 per barrel for a three-day period ending August 31, and again retreated to around $46 per barrel. Even after the spectacular three-day performance, energy ETFs failed to recoup their losses made in mid-to-late summer. In particular, stock-based energy ETFs like the First Trust ISE-Revere Natural Gas Index ETF (NYSEARCA: FCG ) and the PowerShares S&P SmallCap Energy Portfolio ETF (NASDAQ: PSCE ) plunged 35.9% and 32.4%, respectively, over the past three months while futures-based energy ETFs like the iPath S&P Crude Oil Total Return Index ETN (NYSEARCA: OIL ) and the United States Oil ETF (NYSEARCA: USO ) lost 31.6% and 27%, respectively. FCG and PSCE have a Zacks ETF Rank of 4 or ‘Sell’ rating with a High risk outlook. The outlook for oil and the related ETFs look dull at present given the unfavorable demand and supply dynamics. In fact, the International Energy Agency (IEA) in its recent monthly report stated that the global oil market would remain oversupplied through 2016 though lower oil prices and a strengthening economy will boost oil demand at the fastest pace in five years. Yet, demand is currently not as strong as expected given the China slowdown and weakness in emerging markets. Automotive Thrives The U.S. automotive industry is on top gear with fat wallets, rising income and increasing consumer confidence adding adequate fuel. This is especially true as auto sales have been consecutively on the rise over the past four months with sales remaining above the healthy 17-million mark. The industry is likely to flourish going forward given that the economy is gaining traction after the first-quarter slump. Economic activity is picking up, labor market is strengthening, consumer spending is increasing, and the housing market is improving. Additionally, lower gasoline price is a huge boon to auto sales. The upside can be further confirmed by the solid Zacks Industry Rank, as about two-thirds of the industries under the auto sector have a strong Zacks Rank in the top 30%, suggesting growth ahead. Investors could ride out this surging sector with the only pure play the First Trust NASDAQ Global Auto Index ETF (NASDAQ: CARZ ) . The fund was a victim of recent broad sell-off, shedding 16.4% over the last three months. However, the ETF has a solid Zacks ETF Rank of 2 with a High risk outlook, urging investors to take advantage of the current beaten down price. Link to the original post on Zacks.com